The autobiography of Andrew Loog Oldham, infamous manager and producer of The Rolling Stones, is a hugely entertaining life story that takes in an overview of Sixties London and the birth of British youth culture.
Andrew Loog Oldham is the author of Stoned, and 2Stoned.
Stoned is not a cautionary tale it's a celebration and carries the
hope that any self-respecting impassioned young 19-year-old of
today would do the same
*Guardian*
A sterling work of brutal youth and brash vulgarity... a heady mix
of innocence and glamour, uppers and downers, flashiness and
outrage, insouciance and deceit
*Time Out*
A dazzling overview of early 60s London life, Stoned is vastly
aided by the testimony of everyone from Pete Townshend to Jimmy
Greaves
*G Magazines*
A fascinating and original perspective on that heady moment when a
buttoned-up Britain finally lost its innocence and...youth culture
was born
*Mail on Sunday*
The most flash personality British pop ever had, the most anarchic
and obsessive and imaginative hustler of all
*Nick Cohn*
Stoned is not a cautionary tale it's a celebration and
carries the hope that any self-respecting impassioned young
19-year-old of today would do the same * Guardian *
A sterling work of brutal youth and brash vulgarity... a heady mix
of innocence and glamour, uppers and downers, flashiness and
outrage, insouciance and deceit * Time Out *
A dazzling overview of early 60s London life, Stoned is
vastly aided by the testimony of everyone from Pete Townshend to
Jimmy Greaves * G Magazines *
A fascinating and original perspective on that heady moment when a
buttoned-up Britain finally lost its innocence and...youth culture
was born * Mail on Sunday *
The most flash personality British pop ever had, the most anarchic
and obsessive and imaginative hustler of all * Nick Cohn *
Oldham is and forever will be best known as the trendy hustler from mid-1960s swinging London who discovered the Rolling Stones and molded their bad-boy tendencies in his own image. After the Stones unceremoniously dumped him as manager during the Summer of Love, Oldham more or less disappeared from the rock 'n' roll mapÄproducing a few artists here and there and living off his past success. But as shown by this delightful cut-and-paste romp (interviews with Oldham spliced together with comments from other hipsters such as designer Mary Quant, the Who's Pete Townshend and writer Nik CohnÄbut, curiously, no interviews with any of the Stones), Oldham's memories are not only sharp, insightful and full of gossip, but also reflect that he has probably forgotten more about the music business in his fast-paced early life than most of his peers can claim to know. The Stones don't appear until halfway through the book, but the pre-1963 material is perhaps the most intriguing part of Oldham's memoir. As he moved from posh schools to '50s lowlife to early '60s social scenes, Oldham probably met every big name and con artist who ever populated London or the south of FranceÄfrom Picasso (from whom he bummed money) to infamous producers Mickie Most and Phil Spector. The wealth of information, details and larger-than-life stories about the London music scene before the Beatles and the Stones that Oldham recounts provides a valuable record of a fertile and fascinating, albeit overlooked, cultural era. At 19, he may have known "nothing about the music biz," as Pete Townshend confirms, but as a "worldly-wise" purveyor of '60s excess who may have blown his mind way back when, Oldham proves today with this hotter-than-hot-for-hard-core-fans memoir that he has never lost his sense or sensibility. 60 b&w photos. (Feb.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
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